DEVELOPMENT—Businesses Spearhead Drive To Block New Home Depot

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A feud over a proposed shopping center in Agoura Hills is taking some unusual twists.

Unlike most development battles that pit business against environmental groups and community residents, this battle has business facing off against business. Those against the project are suggesting that the city council pass a law curtailing development, and at least one local resident is leveling some pretty extreme charges against city officials.

It all revolves around a proposal by Selleck Development Group to build a 255,000-square-foot shopping center on the south side of Agoura Road between Kanan and Reyes Adobe roads, a 24-acre parcel that was deemed blighted and earmarked for commercial redevelopment about five years ago.

Selleck has acquired all but one of the parcels needed for the development and it reached a tentative agreement with Home Depot to anchor the center with a 139,000-square-foot store. The developer also has held discussions with a gourmet market, day care center and other, smaller retail shops. It is working on an environmental impact report and other studies the city requires to evaluate the project.

But even before those reports are complete, a group spearheaded by four businesses and one private citizen has begun a campaign to prevent Home Depot from moving in by taking the issue directly to voters.

The group, which calls itself Citizens for Responsible Growth, wants a law prohibiting retail stores larger than 60,000 square feet from being built in the area. It would effectively block any big box store, Home Depot in particular.


Businesses push initiative

What makes the Agoura Hills initiative stand out is it’s aimed at a parcel that was earmarked for retail with the blessing of the community. The drive is also led, not by environmentalists, but by a handful of businesses that fear the competition posed by Home Depot.

“In Agoura Hills right now there’s a Do It Center, there’s a Roadside Lumber, there’s a Fence Factory, there’s a fashion door company and an Agoura building materials company,” said Mel Adams, the owner of Agoura Equipment Rentals and Supplies Inc., and one of the founding members of Citizens for Responsible Growth. “If Home Depot comes in, every one of those stores would be gone because they can’t compete with them.”

Daniel Selleck, president of the company that bears his name, has reached agreements to purchase all but one of the parcels he needs for his proposed $40 million development. Adams is the last holdout.

He claims that Selleck has made no attempt to negotiate with him.

But Selleck counters that he has held many meetings with the landowner, one of five that control the parcel he needs for his development.


Group has Web site

Citizens for Responsible Growth has set up a Web site, Saveagoura.com, hired a spokesman and a land attorney and claims to have recruited hundreds more local residents to its cause.

The group asserts that any large development on the site would adversely affect the character of the community and create traffic congestion. And it says it is unwilling to leave a decision on the project in the hands of city government.

“We just wanted to put that type of power back to the people’s hands,” said Al Abrams, a Tarzana resident who was hired by Citizens for Responsible Growth as their spokesman.

But even though they’re pushing for a citizen vote, the group will also ask the city council to pass a law without any vote at all.

Dan Crisafuli, one of the group’s founding members, believes the city has not been forthcoming in its negotiations with Selleck.

“The city of Agoura Hills is a cloak-and-dagger government that does not let the citizens know what is going on behind closed doors,” said Crisafuli, the only private citizen in the anti-development group. “If you try to get information that’s public record, they hide it from you.”

For its part, the city points out that the group is jumping the gun. Since Selleck made an initial application for the development in February, officials have asked him to respond to about 30 different points and questions, and it has not yet received the reports it needs to proceed with public hearings and the other steps that govern the planning process.

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